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PARTNERS
WEDNESDAY 9TH NOVEMBER 2011
NATION&WORLD
Three Australians
wounded in Afghanistan
ANOTHER three Australian soldiers have been wounded in
Afghanistan, reportedly by an Afghan National Army soldier.
Defence has confirmed the incident happened on Tuesday afternoon
(local time) in the Charmestan region.
It said the Australians suffered serious wounds, but all are stable, and
their families have been contacted.
Defence force chief David Hurley will provide further details later on
Wednesday at 10am (AEDT).
The ABC has reported that the three Australians and two Afghan
soldiers were wounded when an Afghan National Army soldier
opened fire.
The troops were taken to a military hospital at Tarin... Read more
Berlusconi to resign
ELLA IDE
ROME: Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi will resign once
key reforms are adopted later this
month, saying it is vital to show
markets that Italy is “serious”.
“We have to show the markets that
we are serious. I think that is the
important thing we should worry
about, then we can worry about
who leads the government. The
important thing is... Read more
Murdoch tabloid spied on Prince William
JILL LAWLESS
LONDON: A private investigator
working for Rupert Murdoch’s News
of the World conducted surveillance
on Prince William as well of dozens of
politicians and celebrities.
The BBC reports private eye Derek
Webb spied on the prince in 2006
while William was in Gloucestershire,
where his father Prince Charles has a
country home. Read more
Netanyahu’s a liar: Sarkosky
FRENCH President Nicolas
Sarkozy called Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
a “liar” in talks with US
President Barack Obama, who
then complained of having to
deal with him daily.
The private conversation, held
during the G20 summit in the
French city of Cannes last week,
was overheard by a number of...
Read more
The truth about MSG
FEW ingredients have been subject
to as much debate and hysteria as
monosodium glutamate. Let’s dispel
some myths. More than 40 years
ago, The New England Journal of
Medicine published a letter from a
Maryland doctor about a meal he had
eaten. That relatively innocuous letter
was to ignite a food controversy that
has continued unabated ever since.
Read the full story at the Sydney
Morning Herald.
Autistic brains heavier: study
WASHINGTON: A post-mortem analysis of half a dozen autistic boys
shows that their brains are heavier and contained many more neurons
than counterparts without the disorder, US researchers said on
Tuesday.
The study, while small, suggests that brain overgrowth may be
occurring in the womb, according to the findings published in the
November 9 issue of the Journal of the American... Read more
Russia’s Mars mission
A RUSSIAN probe has blasted-off on a three year return mission to
Mars that aims to bring the first sample of the Martian moon Phobos
back to Earth, the Russian space agency says.
The Phobos-Grunt probe blasted-off from the Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan on a Zenit-2SB rocket at 0016 (0716 AEDT) on Wednesday
in what Russia hopes will be its first successful... Read more
Iran not ‘truthful’ about nuclear drive
WASHINGTON: Senior US Senator John Kerry has urged sustained
pressure on Iran after the UN nuclear watchdog agency released a
report seen as backing Western charges that Tehran seeks atomic
weapons.
“The facts of the IAEA report make it clear that Iran has not been
truthful about its nuclear program,” Kerry, a Democrat who chairs the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a... Read more
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